I came across this today and broke up laughing. These are seriously clever! Thanks to the Washington Post. I wasn’t aware of their neologism contest, but I am now! Read and enjoy. Pass it along.
Every writer with half a brain knows to surround himself or herself with editors who are smarter, far more articulate and infinitely better looking.
If the sex scene doesn’t make you want to do it — whatever it is they’re doing — it hasn’t been written right.
Thank your readers and the critics who praise you, and then ignore them. Write for the most intelligent, wittiest, wisest audience in the universe: Write to please yourself.
Writing a novel is like driving a car at night. You can only see as far as your headlights, but you can make the whole trip that way.
If you have an idea that you genuinely think is good, don’t let some idiot talk you out of it.
I do not over-intellectualize the production process. I try to keep it simple: Tell the damned story.
It begins with a character, usually, and once he stands up on his feet and begins to move, all I can do is trot along behind him with a paper and pencil, trying to keep up long enough to put down what he says and does.
Socially, a journalist fits in somewhere between a whore and a bartender. But spiritually he stands beside Galileo. He knows the world is round.
It is only natural to pattern yourself after someone. But you can’t just copy someone. If you like someone’s work, the important thing is to be exposed to everything that person has been exposed to.
If my poetry aims to achieve anything, it’s to deliver people from the limited ways in which they see and feel.
Writing is not necessarily something to be ashamed of, but do it in private and wash your hands afterwards.
In Hollywood, the woods are full of people that learned to write but evidently can’t read. If they could read their stuff, they’d stop writing.
It took me fifteen years to discover I had no talent for writing, but I couldn’t give it up because by that time I was too famous.
Critics are people who sit on the mountaintop and look down on the battlefield. When the fighting is finished, they take it upon themselves to come down from the mountain and shoot the survivors.
Everybody walks past a thousand story ideas every day. The good writers are the ones who see five or six of them. Most people don’t see any.
The reason 99% of all stories written are not bought by editors is very simple. Editors never buy manuscripts that are left on the closet shelf at home.
I write the last line, and then I write the line before that. I find myself writing backwards for a while, until I have a solid sense of how that ending sounds and feels. You have to know what your voice sounds like at the end of the story, because it tells you how to sound when you begin.
My own experience is that once a story has been written, one has to cross out the beginning and the end. It is there that we authors do most of our lying.


























